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This was the story my grand mom or Badi Amma narrated when I was young, younger than my
children are today, but the memories are etched fresh in my mind. Badi Amma had a special ritual before the
commencement of the story telling session.
I would fetch her small shining brass colander containing the
condiments required for making of a pan. She would lovingly hold the green
betel leaf in her hand and go dress the green leaf. Then neatly fold the
betel leaf in a triangle and ensconce it in the depths of her cheek. As she
savoured the taste, her eyes would shut briefly, a signal for the beginning of
the story time.
Chulbul, my younger sister, true to her name had little patience for Amma’s elaborate ritual and tugged at
the dhakai cotton sari of Amma. Amma
lifted her in her arms, sat cross legged on the side of the bed and put her in
her lap. Chulbul closed her eyes
immediately inhaling the smell of Amma, a heady mix of incense, attar, jasmine flowers and pan.
'So where was I?' Amma asked delaying our gratification.
‘You didn’t start,’ Chulbul
reminded her.
‘What?’
‘We want story,' collectively we whined
Amma started
without any preamble. We hushed to hear her in a pin drop silence.
'On a moonless night, the wedding happened. Moonless nights or
amavasya are not auspicious,' the old lady clarified as a matter of fact.
Gloominess cringed her voice.
Who knows it better than me?
The sparkle of five carat diamond studded with emeralds, a
heirloom jewelry on her withered finger gleamed at her. Amma beamed. The momentary sadness of
her eyes evaporated. The diamond ring was a trophy for her ingenuity.
Right under the eyes of her scheming mother-in-law, she had exchanged the
genuine with fake. The old lady wanted to get it polished to gift her son's
daughter-in-law. Amma got the ring on
the pretext of getting it polished and the clever craftsman did the remaining.
No one knew. Everyone was happy. It was simple, like taking a candy from the
baby.
Living in a joint family had taught Amma the value of silence. Unlike youngsters who keep ranting Amma would just go ahead and execute her
plans. Neatly. Swiftly. Silently. The old lady believed till her last
breath that she had gifted a genuine ring!
'Amma, then?' Our impatient
wail jerked her back to reality. Like a lightening.
'Hush! Don’t get on my nerves,' She feigned anger and got back to
the track of the story.
After marriage the bridegroom and the bride had to leave at 4 am
for the bridegroom's village. Before their departure, as the custom was they
had to stop at the ancient temple located at the outskirts of the village and
pray to the deity. It was believed that the deity in the ancient temple would
grant all wishes.
'Can we skip the temple routine? The bridegroom asked the
elders.
'No,' came a stern reply.
'The poor lad acquiesced. After all, he was just of eighteen. No
one asked the girl. It was not required,' said Amma.
As per the custom, the bride groom left on a horse and the bride
in a palanquin to visit the temple. Close to the temple was a peepal tree. Women of the village poured
water on the tree on Saturday to ward off evil eye.
Who would know
the tree itself harboured evil?
On the tree lived a witch. She wasn’t an evil witch, rather a
benevolent one. However, that day, as the young bride, barely of sixteen bowed
before the deity, seeking courage to enter in the world of marital bliss, the
witch got enamoured.
The witch was not always a witch. Many moons ago she lived,
breathed, ate, drank, danced just like all of us.
‘Then how did she become a witch?’ I asked. It was so difficult to
contain the excitement.
‘I am coming to it,’ interjected Amma. ‘Don’t disturb me; You interrupt my train of thoughts.’ Amma curled her silver strands in an
effort to give it a ringlet like look.
Bala,
the witch of the peepal tree was a
mother-less girl. Her mother had died in child birth. The young priest could
not bear to see Bala. Her face
reminded him of his departed wife, his only love. He never married again, but carnal desire that was a separate
subject. He had wives in neighbouring villages, but they lived at their parent’s
place. Priest Suryakant belonged to the uppermost strata of brahmins. He
was allowed the privilege to have wives more than one. Naturally, wives and religious ceremonies
kept him busy. He would rarely remain at home. The girl grew up mostly alone in the company
of conniving aunts and relatives. To ward off loneliness, she made friends with
unknown. Just like we human beings live on the earth, the spirits also coexist.
They can’t be seen by all. Only those who are attuned to them can feel them. Bala was one of those. Amma paused to give a dramatic effect.
‘Continue....’we screeched. Amma
gave a contented look. The story had cast a spell on the listeners.
‘Fetch me a glass of water,’ Amma
drawled. I am an old lady, she reminded us.
I ran to get her the glass of water.
Amma
finished the drink in a gulp and continued.
Young Bala fell in love.
Her lover was an exceptionally handsome young man. On full moon night, Bala would stay in the middle of the
forest waiting for him. He brought her fragrant jasmine flowers in autumn. Bala loved jasmine flowers.
‘Just like you, Amma,’ I
said.
Amma
grinned. ‘Yes, my love, just like me.'
No one in the village wore fragrant jasmine in autumn, except Bala. The girls were jealous of her.
They wanted to meet her lover, but Bala
would not let anyone see him. He was only for her.
Together in the forest they would walk miles hand-in-hand. One day
Bala was not well. He carried her in
his arms. That day, she noticed the amulet around his neck and a serpent shaped
armlet on his sinewy arms. Gingerly she touched his arm. He flinched.
‘Are you okay?’ Bala
asked.
‘Yes and No, ‘he answered.
‘What do you mean?’ Bala
was concerned.
‘I long for your touch, but can’t bear it. It burns me.’
Bala
was hurt. He doesn’t love me, she thought.
‘Poor child!’ Amma
expressed her sorrow for Bala
'Are you not wasting your sympathy on her?' I was quick to judge
her. She was the witch of the peepal
tree. The curiosity got better of me and I shouted, ‘Tell more.'
Amma rolled her eyes at my insolence. I looked sideways.
'I have to straighten my legs,' Amma said. Chulbul had slept in her
lap by then. I picked Chulbul from
her lap. She massaged her feet and knees. Amma
hobbled to the bed motioning me to put Chulbul
on it. As soon as I laid her on the bed, Amma
covered Chulbul with her favourite
teddy bear quilt. She lied beside her and I snuggled closer to her.
‘Amma, you didn’t answer
my query,’ I persisted.
Amma
stretched her feet and stroked my hair. ‘It’s getting late, why don’t you
sleep?’ She suggested.
‘No, Amma, I want to
hear the story. I can’t sleep until I get to know the end.’
Amma
gave me a dejected smile and continued.
Bala
had fallen in love with a person from the outer world.
‘Like ghost,’ I enquired.
‘Yes,’ said Amma and
became quiet. An uncomfortable silence lingered.
When did Bala know that
he was a ghost? This was getting spookier than I imagined.
It was purely accidental. Bala
and her lover were walking in the woods. She was feeling tired and stopped by a
pond to drink water. Sitting there she caught her reflection, but his reflection
was not there. Gingerly she touched the jasmine string tucked in her braid. The
flowers were fresh as the morning dew.
Spirits don’t
have shadows.
Her father’s words rang in her mind.
Startled she looked at him. His eyes bore regret. They spoke the
unsaid.
With feet as heavy as lead she came back home. He was not for
real.
The days dragged without mirth. She was a living corpse. Then her
marriage was decided by elders. A night prior to her wedding she hung herself
from the peepal tree. In the morning
her body was found. She was not cremated. Going against the diktats of the
religion, her father didn’t let a burning pyre touch her. It would scar her
face, the face he loved the most in the world, his departed true love, his
wife. They buried her. From then she lived in the peepal tree.
‘And her love….’I questioned. ‘Now that she belonged to his world,
did she unite with him?’
No. In their world, she was an outcast. She had deliberately taken
her life. Her soul was a shadow now, trapped in a world of darkness. True love had metamorphosed her in a
shadow. Her life was pale and had been
like that for years. On moonless nights her pain multiplied several times..
That day, when the bride prayed for marital bliss, Bala’s shadow of the soul became
restless. Crouched on the peepal tree
nothing escaped her eyes:
The way young bridegroom squeezed his bride’s hands beneath her
veil. Her downcast eyes, quiver and the shy smile, reserved only for him.
What bliss lies in marriage? How would life have been if I would have
united with my love?
As the girl got up and carefully adjusted her veil while crossing
the peepal tree, in a whiff, Bala captured her soul and entered in
her body.
No one knew and Bala
entered the life of matrimony. She experienced shades of emotions she never
had: passion, jealousy, anger even hatred, but most importantly attachment.
Something she had never felt before.
Madhav, her husband was a farmer like most men of the village.
But, unlike other men he was sensitive. Every evening after he returned from the
fields she served him dinner, a meager preparation, but they ate it together
from the same plate. On everything important or trivial he sought her opinion.
Whenever he went out of the village, he got her glass bangles and jasmine
flower strings, in season. Once he got her a parrot to fill her void created by
childlessness. Never did he utter a harsh word to her.
Every night when they went to sleep, like other women, she didn’t
sleep on the mud floor; rather they shared the same bed. Love flowered between
them. She was his breath. Then the unthinkable happened. She felt a flutter in
her abdomen. A life had begun to live inside her. It was an unmistakable
feeling. She felt powerful, akin to God, someone with whom her soul wanted to
merge with now. Not any more. She could create life, just like him. The thing
called love had consummated her soul. She forgot that she was a witch, a
non-living.
In all these ten years, even once, Bala didn’t go back to her home. But now she had to. The custom was
that the first child was born at the parent’s place. Bala was hesitant. What if they recognized that she was not her
daughter?
‘Can’t I stay here?’ She asked as they prepared for the bed.
‘I also don’t want you to go, but how do I handle these women,’ he
expressed his anguish.
‘That’s because you don’t love me,’ she resorted to the oldest
argument known to a woman.
‘They just don’t listen to me. It’s difficult for me to live
without you,’ he threw his hand up in frustration. Lovingly, he caressed her
hair. ‘You smell so good, always of attar, he commented.
‘That’s because, I wear it all the time,’ she teased him.
He held her in a tight embrace. Her soul danced.
I will not go anywhere. If I go you are also coming, her voice was
firm, leaving no room for argument.
They slept in close embrace. She had never felt happier. In the
dead of the night, a serpent came from nowhere. Stealthily he crawled to the
bed and bit Madhav.
Madhav yelped. His
primal cry woke up Bala. She knew
that cry. She had felt it when her soul was leaving her body. Love pooled
in his dark brown eyes and they were for
her. He knew it was time for him to go. I am thirsty, his voice was just a
whisper.
Water from Bala was no
less than the sacred Ganga jal. Bala
cradled his head. Tears were flowing freely. The bite had turned blue. Froth
began to appear on his mouth.
Water, he said with all his might.
She couldn’t leave him. Not now. She stretched her hand and it
went till the well, filled a pot, poured it in the glass and came back to the
room.
She offered water to Madhav.
He was paralyzed with naked fear and venom.
His pupils had dilated. ‘Who are you?’ They asked silently. Before Bala could explain they shut forever.
No one saw Bala after that night.

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